| Literature DB >> 28108469 |
Suna Lahut1,2, Suzana Gispert1, Özgür Ömür1,2, Candan Depboylu3, Kay Seidel4, Jorge Antolio Domínguez-Bautista1, Nadine Brehm1, Hülya Tireli5, Karl Hackmann6, Caroline Pirkevi2, Barbara Leube7, Vincent Ries3, Kerstin Reim8, Nils Brose8, Wilfred F den Dunnen9, Madrid Johnson10, Zsuzsanna Wolf11, Marc Schindewolf12, Wiebke Schrempf13, Kathrin Reetz14, Peter Young15, David Vadasz3, Achilleas S Frangakis10, Evelin Schröck6, Helmuth Steinmetz1, Marina Jendrach1, Udo Rüb4, Ayşe Nazlı Başak2, Wolfgang Oertel3, Georg Auburger16.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a frequent neurodegenerative process in old age. Accumulation and aggregation of the lipid-binding SNARE complex component α-synuclein (SNCA) underlies this vulnerability and defines stages of disease progression. Determinants of SNCA levels and mechanisms of SNCA neurotoxicity have been intensely investigated. In view of the physiological roles of SNCA in blood to modulate vesicle release, we studied blood samples from a new large pedigree with SNCA gene duplication (PARK4 mutation) to identify effects of SNCA gain of function as potential disease biomarkers. Downregulation of complexin 1 (CPLX1) mRNA was correlated with genotype, but the expression of other Parkinson's disease genes was not. In global RNA-seq profiling of blood from presymptomatic PARK4 indviduals, bioinformatics detected significant upregulations for platelet activation, hemostasis, lipoproteins, endocytosis, lysosome, cytokine, Toll-like receptor signaling and extracellular pathways. In PARK4 platelets, stimulus-triggered degranulation was impaired. Strong SPP1, GZMH and PLTP mRNA upregulations were validated in PARK4. When analysing individuals with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder, the most specific known prodromal stage of general PD, only blood CPLX1 levels were altered. Validation experiments confirmed an inverse mutual regulation of SNCA and CPLX1 mRNA levels. In the 3'-UTR of the CPLX1 gene we identified a single nucleotide polymorphism that is significantly associated with PD risk. In summary, our data define CPLX1 as a PD risk factor and provide functional insights into the role and regulation of blood SNCA levels. The new blood biomarkers of PARK4 in this Turkish family might become useful for PD prediction.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Complexin 1; PARK4; Parkinson's disease; Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder; α-synuclein
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28108469 PMCID: PMC5451169 DOI: 10.1242/dmm.028035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Model Mech ISSN: 1754-8403 Impact factor: 5.758
Fig. 1.Large kindred with autosomal dominant PD inheritance attributable to PARK4 mutation with 12 presymptomatic PARK4 heterozygotes. (A) Pedigree structure with genotype of SNCA gene duplication. Squares and circles denote male and female individuals, respectively. Black filling versus the black symbol with ‘+’ inside illustrates clinically manifested PD versus presymptomatic PARK4 heterozygote status, respectively. The letter ‘N’ indicates the individuals genotyped and found not to carry the PARK4 mutation. Samples from the rest of the individuals were unavailable to us; therefore, their status was indicated according to the information gained from the family. (B) DNA from the Turkish PARK4 family exhibits duplications at the SNCA locus. The analysis of the chromosome 4q22.1-22.2 region by molecular karyotyping using Agilent array CGH revealed two adjacent copy number gains on chromosome 4 (left chromosome view, right gene view). The first duplication, 833-862 kb in size, carries GPRIN3, SNCA and MMRN1 in their entirety. The second duplication, in close proximity, affects exons 7-13 of the GRID2 gene. The genomic position coordinates as annotated by hg19 nomenclature are indicated above for both chromosome 4 fragments that exist in three copies. (C) PARK4 blood shows upregulation of α-synuclein monomer, but no high molecular weight aggregates in the limited mobility zone of gels. Whole blood protein extracts were depleted in hemoglobin, analyzed on polyacrylamide blots subjected to delipidation, then studied for α-synuclein (above) and β-actin (below, as a loading control) immunoreactivity.
Fig. 2.Correlation between whole blood mRNA levels (qPCR) of candidate genes and PARK4 genotype, comparing 14 adult PARK4 heterozygotes versus nine age-matched control relatives. (A) Scattergrams represent the expression levels in whole blood of individual transcripts determined by qPCR and normalized versus TBP loading control, with mean and s.e.m. (B) The bar graph summarizes these scattergrams by illustrating nominal Student's unpaired t-test P-values. The selected candidate genes are either known to be mutated in monogenic PD (black) or were previously claimed to constitute a blood expression biomarker of PD (yellow) or represent components of the interactome of α-synuclein (SNCA), including β-synuclein (SNCB) (orange), 14-3-3 isoforms (YWHAG, YWHAB and YWHAE) (purple) and complexin 1 (CPLX1) (blue) within the presynaptic SNARE complex. *P<0.05.
Stimulation-induced blood platelet degranulation
Fig. 3.Electron microscopy of blood platelets after stimulus-triggered degranulation is depicted, illustrating centrally clustered α-granules (red arrows) and glycogen granules (white arrowheads), but no detectable protein aggregates in PARK4 cases versus matched WT relatives. Scale bars: 200 nm (n=2 control versus n=2 PARK4 individuals). WT, wild type.
Fig. 4.Blood RNA-seq validation. (A,B) mRNA levels assessed by qPCR in PARK4 (A) show downregulation of CPLX1 and upregulation of GZMH, SPP1 and PLTP (n=9 control versus 12 PARK4 individuals), and in RBD (B) show significant downregulation only for CPLX1, an upregulation for SPP1 only after removal of one outlier value among controls (n=19 controls versus n=46 RBD cases) and no relevant changes for GZMH and PLTP. The individual value plots show the mean and s.e.m. *P<0.05, **P<0.01.
Fig. 5.Accumulation of complexin 1 protein and downregulation of Human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells were transiently transfected with plasmid pcDNA3.1(+) as an empty vector control or WT SNCA. (A) Immunoblot confirmation of successful SNCA overexpression and of the effect on complexin 1 protein levels on the second day after transfection, using GAPDH and β-actin as the loading controls (n=3 versus n=3 versus n=3 in independent experiments). (B) Densitometric quantification of complexin 1 (antibody from Synaptic systems) versus ACTB ratios, normalized against control, in a scattergram analysis with t-test. (C) Analysis of corresponding CPLX1 mRNA levels at 2 days after transfection. Asterisks indicate statistical significance versus control group (n=6 versus n=3 versus n=12). *P<0.05, **P<0.01. ACTB, β-actin; α-Syn, α-synuclein; WT, wild type.
Fig. 6.PD midbrain autopsies contain cytoplasmic and neuritic aggregates. Tissue sections (5 μm thick) from individuals with PD were stained with anti-complexin 1 (Acris) or double stained with anti-complexin 1 and anti- SNCA antibodies. (A-C) Neurons in the substantia nigra exhibiting Lewy body-like structures mildly stained with anti-complexin 1 (arrowheads). (D) Complexin 1 immunopositive Lewy neurite-like structure (asterisks) in the medulla at the level of the motor vagus nucleus. (E-H) Double immunostaining depicting possible co-localization of α-synuclein (SNCA; green) and complexin 1 (red), only after maximal exposure and contrast adjustment in the red channel. Sections were counterstained with Hoechst dye.
Significant association of the
Fig. 7.Elevated SNCA mRNA and protein levels in adult mouse Normalized fold changes are shown for qPCR (n=4 versus n=4, left above) and immunoblot quantitation (n=3 versus n=4, left below) in scattergrams, together with representative scans of western blots for complexin 1/2, α-synuclein and β-actin (right). *P<0.05; ***P<0.001.